Abstract

:

Assessment of water resources from mountainous catchments is crucial for the development of upstream rural areas and downstream urban communities. However, lack of data in these mountainous catchments prevents full understanding of the response of hydrology or water resources to climate change. Meanwhile, hydrological modeling is challenging due to parameter uncertainty. In this work, one tributary of the Yarlung Zangbo River Basin (the upper stream of the Brahmaputra River) was used as a case study for hydrological modeling. Tropical Rainfall Measuring Mission (TRMM 3B42V7) data were utilized as a substitute for gauge-based rainfall data, and the capability of simulating precipitation, snow, and groundwater contributions to total runoff by the Soil and Water Assessment Tool (SWAT) was investigated. The uncertainty in runoff proportions from precipitation, snowmelt, and groundwater was quantified by a batch-processing module. Hydrological signatures were finally used to help identify if the hydrological model simulated total runoff and corresponding proportions properly. The results showed that: (1) TRMM data were very useful for hydrological simulation in high and cold mountainous catchments; (2) precipitation was the primary contributor nearly all year round, reaching 56.5% of the total runoff on average; (3) groundwater occupied the biggest proportion during dry seasons, whereas snowmelt made a substantial contribution only in late spring and summer; and (4) hydrological signatures were useful for helping to evaluate the performance of the hydrological model.

Keywords:

SWAT; TRMM 3B42V7; Niyang River Basin; runoff component analysis

1. Introduction

Water is the origin of life, the necessity of industrial manufacturing, and the foundation of ecology. Nowadays, human-induced changes such as climate change, population growth, and rapid urbanization are putting enormous stress on water resources. Besides, the energy crisis has wrapped around the globe, and it is acknowledged that hydroelectric power generation is a better choice than other traditional energy means as it produces less pollution [1]. Increasing demands for fresh water for living and manufacturing also lead to critical water resource shortage, which requires sophisticated water resource management [2,3]. The southwestern area of China, which is also called the “Chinese water tower” or “Asian water tower”, provides 49% of the runoff for the Yellow River. The exit flow of the Yarlung Zangbo River, the Lantsang River, and the Salween River aggregately come to 500 billion cubic meters, which is nearly equal to the total water consumption of China (600 billion cubic meters) [4]. Current per capita availability of water in China is only equal to one-fourth of the world. Water shortage becomes more severe along with climate change and developments in economics. The southwest source area is the forming region and strategic stockpile for fresh water for China and will certainly play an important role in future water management.

Precipitation is the most important driving factor for hydrological cycles. It is nearly impossible for hydrologists to simulate the water cycles over regions with no or sparse precipitation gauge networks [5]. Without the observed data to force hydrological models, it is hard to conduct calibrations of model parameters, and the output of models is doubtful. In fact, the availability of high-quality ground rainfall data is very limited across many parts of the world, especially over complex terrain and remote areas. Currently there are many satellite precipitation products, such as the Tropical Rainfall Measuring Mission (TRMM) Multisatellite Precipitation Analysis (TMPA) [6], the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) Climate Prediction Center (CPC) MORPHing technique product [7], the Precipitation Estimation from Remotely Sensed Information using Artificial Neural Networks (PERSIANN) [8], and the PERSIANN Cloud Classification System estimation [9]. These satellite precipitation products provide alternatives for gauge precipitation, which have experienced significant success in the past decade. Satellite rainfall data were compared from PERSIANN, TMPA-3B42V7, and TMPA-3B42RT, as well as with gauged data over Iran, which showed that TMPA-3B42V7 behaved better than the other two [10]. CMORPH, PERSIANN, TRMM-3B42V7, and TRMM 3B43 were compared to ground data in the arid region of China, which showed that TRMM 3B42V7 performed the best in detecting precipitation occurrences and accessing precipitation amount [11]. PERSIANN-CDR, TRMM-3B42V7, and (National Centers for Environment Prediction-Climate Forecast System Reanalysis) NCEP-CFSR were evaluated against gauge observations in two humid basins of China, which showed that TRMM-3B42V7 outperformed the other two products, with the smallest errors and bias and the highest correlation on a monthly scale: Besides, simulations forced with 3B42V7 achieved the best match with daily gauged streamflow [12]. Therefore, in this study, TRMM-3B42V7 data were used. The Tropical Rainfall Measuring Mission is a mission that delivers a unique 17-year dataset of global tropical rainfall to improve understanding of climate and weather modeling, human impacts on rainfall, snow and snowmelt modeling, among other endeavors [13,14,15,16,17,18,19,20]. The TRMM 3B42V7 is a product from the TRMM Multisatellite Precipitation Analysis, which is based on the calibration by the TRMM Combined Instrument and TRMM Microwave Imager precipitation products. The 3B42V7 incorporates the new Global Precipitation Climatology Centre monthly precipitation for bias adjustment [12].

Runoff component analyses are important in hydrological studies. However, very limited attention has been paid to proper simulations of runoff components when using hydrological models [21]. Most studies have only investigated whether the hydrological models used in the applications simulate the total runoff reasonably in the calibration or validation [22,23,24,25]. However, only considering the total runoff in the calibration or validation may cause errors in prediction or forecasting, particularly in areas where snow or glaciers contribute significantly to the total runoff. The results seem to be satisfactory based on the first sight of objective function values like the Nash efficiency coefficient (NS) and relative bias (PBIAS) obtained in the calibration [22]. However, precipitation, snowmelt, and groundwater components of runoff may deviate from reality, which probably results in wrong predictions or projections. This can be due to the fact that only limited observation data are often available for hydrological modeling. Recently, a few studies did pay attention to this problem. For example, a degree-day-based distributed hydrological model was used to investigate the spatial distribution of runoff components in the Koxkar Glacier, which could reveal characteristics of climatic gradients, local topography and morphology, and catchment meteorology [26]: Path analysis was utilized along with isotopic measurements to investigate runoff components in a glacier-covered alpine catchment (the upper Hailuogou Valley) in southwest China and revealed that snowmelt took up nearly three quarters of total discharge [27]. The study here will provide good insight into hydrological modeling by investigating runoff proportions in-depth over a cold mountainous river basin with very limited data. There will be more confidence in hydrological modeling based on deeper investigation into runoff components.

Besides runoff component analysis, hydrological signatures could be alternatives in identifying if the hydrological model simulates runoff components properly. Hydrological signatures have been widely used in evaluating hydrological model and streamflow characteristics such as overall water balance, vertical soil moisture redistribution, behavior of long-term baseflow, and timing. Therefore, hydrological signature analysis can be the supplement to residual-based goodness-of-fit measures, (e.g., the Nash–Sutcliffe efficiency measure) [28,29,30,31]. In this study, hydrological signatures were used to support the analysis of total runoff and corresponding components.

A tributary of the Yarlung Zangbo River, namely the Niyang River, where the in situ observation was rather limited, was selected as the case study. The objective of this work was two-fold: (1) To testify as to whether TRMM-3B42V7 was suitable for hydrological modeling in complex terrain in the southwest of China, and (2) to analyze the proportions of different runoff components from precipitation, groundwater, and snow in the selected basin. The paper is organized as follows: Section 2 introduces the study area and data. Section 3 describes the main methodology, including precipitation evaluation indices, hydrological model, and hydrological signatures. Results are presented in Section 4. Finally, discussion and conclusions are described in Section 5 and Section 6.

2. Study Area and Data

2.1. Study Area

Due to enormous differences in height and latitude, there are various climatic zones in Tibet, including humid tropical or subtropical zones, semi-humid (or semi-arid) temperate zones, and semi-arid (or arid) cold zones. The study area, the Niyang River Basin, is located in a humid temperate climate zone. Figure 1 shows the location of the study area. The Niyang River originates from the west of Mila Mountain and joins with the Yarlung Zangbo River in Linzhi County. The average temperature is about 8 degrees centigrade, with an annual precipitation of 600–900 mm and annual sunshine duration of 2022 h. The river is 307.5 km in length, and the basin area is 16,048.7 km2. The average slope of the river is 7.39%. The elevation of the basin ranges from 3055 m to 6760 m in height. The main rainy season is from June to September, and more than 90% of discharge comes from this season. The river is abundant in water resources, 22 billion cubic meters per year, and ranks as the fourth-largest among all tributaries of the Yarlung Zangbo River. However, annual change of runoff in Niyang River is not substantial. Also, historical data and literature show that temperature is increasing and will probably continue to increase in the future: Precipitation in the Niyang River Basin will probably increase to some degree [3,4].

2.2. Data

The spatial distribution of precipitation grid points and gauge stations used in this study are illustrated in Figure 1. Meteorological observations in the study area were very limited. Daily meteorological observations (maximum and minimum temperature, relative humidity, wind speed, and solar radiation) from 1978 to 2013 at one nearby station, namely Linzhi Station, were obtained from the China Meteorological Administration. There were no meteorological observations in higher areas of the basin. The available daily discharge record at Gengzhang Station was from 1978 to 2011, with missing data in 2009. Besides observed meteorological data at Linzhi, the Tropical Rainfall Measuring Mission was used for precipitation alternatives. The resolution of TRMM 3B42V7 was 0.25 × 0.25°.

3. Methodology

The framework of this study is shown in Figure 2. First, the TRMM 3B42V7 precipitation was evaluated against the observation to check its performance in the study area. Second, TRMM 3B42V7 was utilized to drive the Soil and Water Assessment Tool (SWAT) hydrological model. A batch-processing module was proposed in this study to automatically perform multiple simulations from SWAT. Behavior hydrological model parameters were used to analyze the runoff components by selecting those with NS > 0.5 and within ±20% PBIAS. Finally, hydrological signatures concerning mean, low, and high flows were computed to verify the runoff components calculated based on hydrological simulations driven by TRMM 3B42V7.

3.1. Precipitation Evaluation Indices

Although observed precipitation data were available for only one nearby station, such data were still used here to help evaluate the appropriateness of TRMM data in hydrological modeling. Two statistical indices were used for the evaluation, namely correlation coefficient (CC) and root mean squared error (RMSE) [32]. CC reflects the degree of linear correlation between precipitation products and gauge observations. RMSE measures the average error between the precipitation estimates and observations, with greater weight on the larger errors.

3.2. Hydrological Model

SWAT is a river basin or watershed scale model developed by Dr. Jeff Arnold for the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) Agricultural Research Service [23,33]. SWAT was developed to predict the impact of land management practices on water, sediment, and agricultural chemical yields in large complex watersheds with varying soils, land use, and management conditions over long periods of time. The SWAT model has the following characteristics: It is physically based, uses readily available inputs, and is computationally efficient. Also, SWAT allows a number of different physical processes to be simulated in a watershed. For modeling purposes, a watershed may be partitioned into a number of subwatersheds or sub-basins. Hydrologic response units are lumped land areas within the sub-basin that are comprised of unique land cover, soil, and management combinations. In this study, the basin was delineated into 15 sub-basins and further into 172 hydrologic response units (HRUs), and the size of the HRUs ranged from 0.84 km2 to 913.26 km2.

In the SWAT model, water balance is the driving force behind everything that happens in the watershed. The hydrologic cycle simulated by SWAT is based on the following water balance equation:

SWt=SW0+∑i=1t(Rday−Qsurf−Ea−wseep−Qgw),

(1)

where SWt is the final soil water content (in mm H2O), SW0 is the initial soil water content on day i (in mm H2O), t is the time (in days), Rday is the amount of precipitation on day i (in mm H2O), Qsurf is the amount of surface runoff on day i (in mm H2O), Ea is the amount of evapotranspiration on day i (in mm H2O), wseep is the amount of water entering the vadose zone from the soil profile on day i (in mm H2O), and Qgw is the amount of return flow on day i (in mm H2O).

The main sources of uncertainty in hydrological modeling are: (1) Simplifications in the conceptual model, (2) processes occurring in the watershed but not included in the model, (3) processes that are included in the model, but their occurrences in the watershed are unknown to the modeler or unaccountable, (4) processes that are not known to the modeler and not included in the model, and (5) errors in the input variables such as rainfall and temperature [34]. Besides errors in input variables, uncertainty in parameters for modeling hydrological processes is important. Therefore, before calibration, parameter sensitivity analysis is essential to provide insights on which parameters contribute most to the output variance because of input variability [35]. Here, 21 hydrological parameters were used for sensitivity analysis for the simulation of streamflow in the study area. The details of all hydrological parameters can be found in Reference [36].

The calibration and uncertainty analysis was done via sequential uncertainty fitting method (SUFI-2). SUFI-2 is the calibration algorithm developed for the calibration of the SWAT model [37]. In SUFI-2, the degree to which all uncertainties are accounted for is quantified by the p-factor and r-factor. The p-factor is the percentage of measured data enveloped by the 95% probability distribution (95PPU). The r-factor is the average thickness of the 95PPU. The 95PPU is calculated at the 2.5% and 97.5% levels of the cumulative distribution of an output variable generated by the propagation of the parameter uncertainties using Latin hypercube sampling [28].

NS and PBIAS were used to evaluate the performance of the hydrological model [22]. NS is a normalized statistic that determines the relative magnitude of the residual variance compared to the measured data variance, and it indicates how well the plot of observed versus simulated data fits the 1:1 line. PBIAS measures the average tendency of the simulated data to be larger or smaller than their observed counterparts. The optimal value of PBIAS is 0, with low-magnitude values indicating accurate model simulation. Positive values indicate model underestimation bias, and negative values indicate model overestimation bias [38].

After calibration, parameter sets with an NS value larger than 0.5 and a PBIAS value within ±20% are regarded as the behavior parameters for the SWAT model [39]. Since the original SWAT model only delivered output files for single simulation, a batch-processing module was developed in this study to conduct SWAT simulations automatically as well as to store the output files of each simulation for further component analysis. Based on this, multisimulations were again conducted by the batch-processing module to obtain detailed information on the runoff components (runoff proportions) for all behavior parameter sets. Such a procedure was implemented for TRMM-driven hydrological simulation.

3.3. Runoff Components and Hydrological Signatures

Basin conditions, especially climatic factors, have much influence on the river discharge. Precipitation, temperature, and evapotranspiration vary greatly in space. All these factors deeply influence the formation as well as the evolution of runoff. In the Niyang River Basin, precipitation, snow, and groundwater are equally important in generating total runoff in the river outlet. However, their detailed contributions are not clearly quantified. This is particularly important when climate change is affecting the mountainous river, and snow may melt due to temperature increase.

In this study, the SWAT model was used for analysis of the runoff component. Compared to traditional methods of runoff component analysis such as isotope and pathway analysis [27], hydrological modeling requires much less field experimentation, which costs time and resources. Based on the structure of the SWAT model, runoff components can only be calculated at the HRU level and then summed at the sub-basin/watershed level. In this study, irrigation water and ponds and reservoirs were not taken into consideration. Streamflow was composed of three components: Rain-generated, snowmelt, and groundwater flow. Groundwater contributed to streamflow from both aquifers and could be directly obtained from model outputs. TRMM 3B42V7 provided original precipitation, which was further divided into rain and snow via the SWAT model based on a snowfall temperature parameter (SFTMP). Thus, initial volumes of rain and snowmelt were available in the model to help determine their respective proportions in remaining streamflow. The equations are listed below:

fQ,G=GQ,

(2)

fQ,R=RR+S(1−fQ,G),

(3)

fQ,S=SR+S(1−fQ,G),

(4)

where fQ,G represents the fraction of total runoff that originated from groundwater, G is groundwater contribution to total runoff, Q is the total runoff, fQ,R represents the fraction of total runoff that originated from rainfall, R is the amount of precipitation falling as rainfall, S is the amount of snowmelt obtained from the SWAT model, and fQ,S represents the fraction of total runoff that originated from snowmelt.

Hydrological signatures are a number of important streamflow characteristics that constitute the natural flow regimes, including seasonal pattern of flows; timing of extreme flows; frequency, predictability, and duration of floods, droughts, and intermittent flows; daily, seasonal, and annual flow variability; and rates of change. They can be used as alternatives to investigate whether runoff components are properly simulated in hydrological modeling. In this study, five hydrological signatures (see Table 1) concerning annual mean, minimum, and maximum monthly flows were selected to help evaluate whether the total runoff and corresponding components were simulated well by the hydrological model with TRMM 3B42V7.

4. Results

4.1. Precipitation Evaluation Results

Since the in situ observation of precipitation was very limited, only two evaluation indices were calculated based on areal mean precipitation of the basin. For the observation, gauge data were used to approximate the areal mean precipitation. A Thiessen polygon was used to generate the areal mean precipitation of TRMM 3B42V7. The results showed that on a daily scale, TRMM 3B42V7 had poor correlations (0.4) with observation. However, there were much better correlations (0.9) on a monthly scale. Besides, the value of the RMSE on a daily scale (53 mm) was almost 2 times the monthly value (35 mm). If observation and the nearest grid point of TRMM were compared, on a daily scale TRMM 3B42V7 also had poor correlations (0.4), whereas there were much better correlations (0.9) on a monthly scale. The value of the RMSE on a daily scale (5 mm) was more than 3 times that of the monthly value (1.4 mm). The results based on the neatest grid were better than those based on the areal mean values. Since the observation data obtained were too limited, the evaluation results of TRMM data may not mean a lot, only indicating to some extent the quality of the TRMM data. Based on both evaluation results, the simulation of the hydrological model was made on a monthly scale.

4.2. Hydrological Model Calibration and Validation

TRMM 3B42V7 was used to drive SWAT to obtain monthly discharge. The investigation period was divided into three parts, namely the warm-up period from 1998 to 1999, the calibration period from 2000 to 2008, and the validation period from 2010 to 2011.

In this study, sensitivity analysis was accomplished with the Latin hypercube and the one factor at a time sampling method [40]. The most sensitive parameters are listed in Table 2. Since there were no good references for parameter ranges for SWAT hydrological simulations in the study area, default initial parameter ranges from the model were used. A multiple regression analysis was used in SWAT to get the statistics of parameter sensitivity, and p-values for corresponding parameters were calculated. A p-value tests the null hypothesis that the coefficient is equal to zero (no effect), and it ranges from 0 to 1. A large p-value suggests that changes in the predictor are not associated with changes in the response, which means that parameter is not very sensitive [41]. After two iterations, rational parameter ranges were obtained with reasonable values of objective functions. It is worth paying attention to lapse rates of temperature and precipitation [42]. The p-values of both lapse rates were almost equal to 0, which means the change of precipitation and temperature with elevation had enormous influence on runoff.

Two iterations were conducted to derive reasonable r-factor and p-factor values, which were 1.35 and 97%, respectively. Considering the shortage of gauged precipitation and temperature data (only one nearby meteorological station had access to temperature data), the values of two indices were regarded as reasonable. The corresponding distributions of NS and PBIAS of the second iteration are shown in Figure 3, and all values of behavior parameter sets met the standards of reasonable simulation [39]. The red bold cross represents the “best” calibration parameter set, whose value of NS was 0.89 and whose value of PBIAS was 2.8%. Figure 4 shows the observed and simulated total runoff as well as the precipitation time series during calibration and validation. It can be observed that the observation data was well-enveloped by the 95PPU range except for during the first year. However, there were some deviations for extreme flows, especially peak flows, which were somehow the inherent disadvantage of the SWAT model [22].

4.3. Runoff Component Analysis

Due to parameter equifinality in hydrological modeling, here the batch-processing module was developed to obtain runoff components of all behavior parameter sets (for which the number was 231). One parameter set was regarded as the “reference” (traditionally the best one), with the highest NS value, 0.89, and a reasonable PBIAS value of 2.8%.

Figure 5 shows the proportion of runoff components from 2000 to 2011 derived from the behavior simulations based on TRMM 3B42V7. It shows that precipitation was the dominating contributor to the total runoff, reaching 56.5% on average. Groundwater contribution ranked second (28.3%), and snowmelt contributed the least (15.2%).

During the calibration period, proportions of precipitation showed less volatility, ranging from 52% to 59%, of which the fluctuations were within 7% and the average was 55%. Proportions of snowmelt ranged from 13% to 17%, with fluctuations of about 5%, and the average was 15%. As for groundwater, proportions ranged from 27% to 32%, and the fluctuations were rather small. Three components distributed evenly through the calibration period. As for the validation period, proportions of precipitation ranged from 60% to 68%, and the average was 64%. Proportions of snowmelt ranged from 17% to 20%, and the average was 18%. Proportions of groundwater ranged from 13% to 23%, and the average was 18%.

Figure 6 shows monthly distributions of runoff components from 2000 to 2011, derived from simulations based on TRMM 3B42V7 for all behavior simulations. Seasonal patterns can be witnessed for three components: Rain-induced runoff took the dominant place during wet seasons (from June to September) and occupied more than half of total runoff, and groundwater runoff came in first place during dry seasons (from December to March). For snowmelt, there was seasonal tendency, too. Snowmelt runoff arose from March to May, and then decreased to zero from May to October. The peak rate occurred in early summer.

4.4. Hydrological Signatures

In this section, hydrological signatures were used to help verify if the total runoff and corresponding components were properly simulated by the hydrological model. Signatures shown in Table 1 were computed based on monthly runoff driven by TRMM 3B42V7. Figure 7 shows the hydrological signatures derived from the observed and simulated runoff based on TRMM 3B42V7. Table 3 presents the hydrological signatures derived from the observed discharge as well as the upper and lower boundary of 95PPU of all behavior simulations based on TRMM 3B42V7.

Figure 7a shows that the mean annual runoff under all behavior parameter sets distributed evenly. Compared to Table 3, it can be concluded that about 60% of all values were smaller than the value calculated based on observation. The mean annual runoff (A1) observation was within the 95PPU range of behavior simulations. Besides, the range was small, which indicates the simulations were quite logical.

Figure 7b shows the distribution of mean minimum monthly flows. Combined with Table 3, more than three-quarters (80%) of all values were in the range from 0 m3/s to 100 m3/s, and the values of mean maximum monthly flows (ML1-12) based on observation were well-wrapped by the simulations. Figure 7c shows the distribution of variability across minimum monthly flows. Combined with Table 3, the values of minimum monthly flows (ML13) calculated based on the observation were 9%, which was smaller than all the values calculated based on behavior simulations. This indicates the variability of simulated low flows was higher than the observed runoff.

Figure 7d shows the distribution of mean maximum monthly flows. Almost all values of MH1-12 were concentrated in the range from 500 m3/s to 2000 m3/s, and the value calculated based on observation fell in the second range, which means the simulations were reasonable. Figure 7e shows the distribution of variability of maximum monthly flows. For this index, nearly all values were within the range from 10% to 40%, and the dominant range was from 10% to 20%. Combined with Table 3, it is easy to know that the value of MH1-12 based on observation was right within the range of simulations.

From Table 3, almost all hydrological signatures of observation were similar to those of the “Best” parameter set, as well as median ones, which reveals that the observation was well-wrapped by the behavior simulations and the “Best” one fit well with the observation.

5. Discussion

In this study, the capability of reproducing proper proportions of runoff components using the hydrological model SWAT driven by TRMM precipitation data was investigated.

As mentioned in Section 2, the meteorological station was located outside the study area, which leads to the question of whether the observed precipitation was reliable or not in driving the hydrological model. Therefore, TRMM 3B42V7 was used as a precipitation alternative for hydrological simulation. In view of total runoff, TRMM 3B42V7 performed reasonably both in evaluating seasonal patterns of river flows as well as estimating total water yield on a monthly scale. TRMM 3B42V7 is regarded as qualified to reproduce observed runoff and therefore can be used to predict runoff in the future for climate change impact analysis. However, from Figure 4, deviations could still be found for some high flows, although the PBIAS of total runoff was relatively small. It is known that the SWAT model has inherent disadvantages that cause underestimation of flows [43,44]. One possible reason for underestimation of flow lies in its model assumption that water entering the deep aquifer is not considered in the water budget and is considered lost from the system [45]. Besides, although the percentage of glaciers in the study basin was small (less than 5%), the model had no proper consideration for glaciers. Insufficient consideration of glaciers affects the simulation of runoff, especially in summer and autumn. Last but not least, it is well known that TRMM often underestimates precipitation in high-altitude regions [46,47,48]. This results in the underestimation of runoff in the study area. With increases in field observation as well as development of more accurate remote sensing data, better simulation can be derived.

As far as the authors know, there are no studies about runoff component analysis for the Niyang River Basin. However, studies within the Himalayan region, which contains the Niyang River Basin, have shown that snowmelt occupies less than 20% of total runoff [49,50]. From Figure 5, it can be found that results from the behavior simulations agreed well with the conclusions derived from the studies above.

The newly developed batch-processing method helped to find all behavior parameters set, and the corresponding outputs were summarized automatically. The uncertainty from parameters was successfully propagated into runoff component simulation. However, without observed runoff component proportions, the simulations could only be indirectly testified to through total runoff and hydrological signatures comparison. More sound methods such as the use of isotope data [51] can be adopted to ensure proper modeling of different runoff components.

From Figure 5, together with the parameter values in Table 2, it can be found that temperature lapse rate (TLAPS) and snowmelt base temperature (SMTMP) were two crucial parameters that could affect the partition of snowmelt from total runoff in the study area. In the SWAT model, TLAPS was the temperature lapse rate across the watershed, and SMTMP was snowmelt base temperature, which affects the rate of snow melting. The simulations based on larger TLAPS and smaller SMTMP values resulted in larger proportions of snow. Besides, precipitation lapse rate (PLAPS), which makes corrections of precipitation before putting them into SWAT, was also crucial. The compensation effects of PLAPS in various sub-basins helped to offset the underestimation of TRMM data and enhance the accuracy of precipitation to improve the model performance.

Results from hydrological signatures analysis were consistent with total runoff estimation and runoff components analysis to a great extent. However, it is worth noticing that variability across minimum monthly flows calculated based on behavior simulations were higher than those based on observation, which means compared with low flow, more confidences were gained for high or normal flows.

6. Conclusions

This study aimed to investigate if the runoff proportions from precipitation, snowmelt, and groundwater were properly simulated using the hydrological model SWAT, driven by TRMM data from a cold, mountainous river, the Niyang River Basin, in the southwest of China.

The main conclusions of this study include: On a monthly scale, TRMM 3B42V7 had good correlations with the observed precipitation. The major sources of river flows of the Niyang River Basin were precipitation and groundwater. Snowmelt made a substantial contribution only in late spring and summer. The hydrological model driven by TRMM 3B42V7 performed well in estimating total runoff. Runoff originating from precipitation mostly concentrated in rainy seasons (May to October) and contributed more than half of total runoff through the year: Snowmelt mostly occurred in spring and summer (May to September) and contributed about 15% of total year runoff. Groundwater occupied the biggest proportion during dry seasons, and the contribution of groundwater to total runoff was about twice that of snowmelt. Based on hydrological signature analysis, though the variability of low flows was overestimated, total runoff, low, and high flows were well simulated.

The investigation of runoff proportions from precipitation, snowmelt, and groundwater in this study provided advanced understanding for hydrological modeling in cold mountainous areas. Such a study can also provide more clear and precise descriptions of runoff components to the modeling community and decision-makers.

Funding

This research was funded by the National Natural Science Foundation of China, grant number [91547106 and 51379183].

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare no conflict of interest. The funders had no role in the design of the study; in the collection, analyses, or interpretation of data; in the writing of the manuscript; or in the decision to publish the results.

Figure 4.
Observed and simulated total runoff and precipitation during calibration and validation.

Figure 4.
Observed and simulated total runoff and precipitation during calibration and validation.

Figure 5.
Proportions of runoff components from 2000 to 2011 derived from behavior simulations based on TRMM 3B42V7. GWQ stands for groundwater runoff, SNO stands for snowmelt runoff, and PRE stands for rainfall runoff. The red crosses wrap 98% of all data. The red short lines represent maximum and minimum values of all data. Black dots are outliners.

Figure 5.
Proportions of runoff components from 2000 to 2011 derived from behavior simulations based on TRMM 3B42V7. GWQ stands for groundwater runoff, SNO stands for snowmelt runoff, and PRE stands for rainfall runoff. The red crosses wrap 98% of all data. The red short lines represent maximum and minimum values of all data. Black dots are outliners.

Figure 6.
Monthly distribution of runoff components from 2000 to 2011, derived from simulations based on TRMM 3B42V7 for all behavior simulations.

Figure 6.
Monthly distribution of runoff components from 2000 to 2011, derived from simulations based on TRMM 3B42V7 for all behavior simulations.

Table 2.
Parameters used in SWAT model, and their ranges used in calibration.

Table 2.
Parameters used in SWAT model, and their ranges used in calibration.

Code a

Parameter

Description

Unit

Initial Range

1

TLAPS v

Temperature lapse rate

°C km

[−10, 0]

2

PLAPS v

Precipitation lapse rate

mm/km

[−3, 3]

3

CN2 a

SCS runoff curve number for moisture condition 2

-

[−57, 73]

4

SMTMP v

Snow melt base temperature

°C

[−5, 5]

5

SOL_Z r

Depth from soil surface to bottom of layer

mm

[−0.9, 150]

a Parameters with smaller codes indicate greater sensitivity. Three types of change were applied to the parameters: v means the existing parameter value was replaced by the given value, a means the given value was added to the existing parameter value, and r means the existing parameter value was multiplied by (1 + a given value). SCS (Soil Conservation Service).